Theory regarding the role of lone-pair interactions in through-space

Jul 9, 1973 - Roland Burton of this Department for help with the construction of the audiopulse spectrometer and Dr. Ray Freeman of Varían Associates...
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the plots of “ln (peak height)” us. “t” were linear and showed no evidence for nonexponential decay. In general, it is likely that cross relaxation may present a more formidable problem that it has for these derivatives. Acknowledgments. This work was supported by the National Research Council of Canada (operating

grants, A 1905, and equipment grants, E 1338 and E 1854) and by the Committee for Research at the University of British Columbia. It is a pleasure to thank Roland Burton of this Department for help with the construction of the audiopulse spectrometer and Dr. Ray Freeman of Varian Associates for helpful discussions.

A Theory Regarding the Role of Lone-Pair Interactions in “Through-Space” Fluorine-Fluorine Nuclear Spin-Spin Coupling Frank B. Mallory Contribution from the Department of Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania 19010. Received June 22, 1973 A theoretical description of the mechanism of “through-space” fluorine-fluorine nuclear spin-spin coupling is presented, based on the concept that two lone-pair orbitals from spatially proximate fluorines can interact by direct overlap to form one bonding and one antibonding molecular orbital delocalized over both fluorines. Positive coupling constants are explained in terms of spin-correlation effects (Hund’s rule behavior) of the electrons in these two-center molecular orbitals and Fermi contact interactions of the spin-polarized fluorine core electrons. The pronounced dependence of the magnitude of this type of coupling on the distance between the two fluorines is accounted for in terms of the Pauli exclusion principle and the extent to which the bonding and antibonding orbitals differ in their electron density distributions. Abstract:

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he existence of a “through-space” mode of spinspin coupling between two fluorine nuclei’ has been convincingly demonstrated by a number of observations of large-magnitude coupling constants in molecules in which the two coupled fluorines are in closc spatial proximity (Le., an F-F distance of about 2.7 A or less) but are separated by four or more bonds.2 The cases known thus far involve molecules of three different structural types, 1-3; some examples are indicated in Figure 1. There are two key characteristics of this type of coupling: the magnitude of the coupling constant depends (1) L. Petrakis and C. H. Sederholm, J . Chem. Phj,s., 35,1243 (1961); S. Ng and C. H. Sederholm, ibid., 40,2090 (1964). (2) (a) W. S. Brey, Jr., and I